USA TODAY International Edition

Movies unleash pet- item sales

Hot flicks make good retail companions for dog days of summer

- Rui Ellie Miao

Pet store owners are wagging their tails over the success of two animated blockbuste­r movies this summer, hoping that Finding Dory and The Secret Life of Pets will unleash higher sales.

“Whenever ( such) movies come out, there is definitely a bit of a jump in the business,” said Eddie Rum, president of Spoiled Brats, a pet supply store in New York with cat adoption services.

Pet- supplies giant PetSmart stands to benefit from its tie- in to The Secret Life of Pets, which entered this weekend as tops at the box office on the past two weeks.

PetSmart is selling an array of toys, apparel and pet bed products based on characters from the comedy. It also has shelf signage in stores in which characters from the movie pitch items to customers.

“If you visit a store, you’ll see the characters ‘ take over’ of PetSmart,” said Ted Passig, executive vice president of buying and sourcing at PetSmart. Among top sellers are a Bungee toy, plushes and ruffle dress tied to characters in the movie, like Buddy, Max and Gidget.

For many pet- related retailers, the movies come along at the right time — during the dog days of summer.

“It’s the slowest season,” said Rum, president of Spoiled Brats. “It’s like everybody’s going away on vacations.”

Animal- related movies not only can generate interest in pet products — they often raise interest in pet ownership.

Historical­ly, animal- themed movies “really created an enthusiasm” for people to get pets, said Mike Bober, president of the Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council and counsel to the Pet Leadership Council. But being a responsibl­e pet owner is often not easy.

“It’s important that people really know what they are getting into,” said Bober.

Finding Dory, the sequel to Finding Nemo from Walt Disney Studios and Pixar, is now the alltime- highest- grossing animated domestic release, standing tall at $ 445.5 million a month after its release. And blue tang, a species of Indo- Pacific surgeonfis­h, is the prototype of the character Dory.

“We’ve had a handful of people come to us for blue tangs, but we don’t sell them,” said Megan Sweeny, manager at Fauna, a small- animal pet shop in New York that specialize­s in fish, birds and reptiles. The fish have appeal right now, “especially parents with small kids,” said Sweeny.

Caring for blue tangs is not for beginners. “It is a more difficult fish to keep in captivity, requires a large tank and great water quality,” said Andrew Rhyne, a marine biologist at Roger Williams University in Bristol, R. I.

More important, “this popu- lar species is 100% collected from the wild,” according to a study by Marine Aquarium Societies of North America.

On the other hand, a clownfish, the species portrayed in the movie by Nemo, is not as hard to tend. They are “very hardy and do very well in small tanks. They are the ideal pet fish,” said Rhyne.

Pet store owner Rum recalled how Chihuahuas were made popular by the 2008 movie Bev

erly Hills Chihuahua. “When a trend comes along, you jump in it,” he says. “There was absolutely a surge in clients,” Rum says.

In the late 1990s, animal shelters around the country were flooded with Dalmatians when the breed became unwanted as the excitement around the 101

Dalmatians movie faded. “Just before Finding Dory was released there was another popular movie, Zootopia, which featured a fennec fox,” said Renee Saldana, entertainm­ent relations coordinato­r at The Humane Society of the United States. “That movie reportedly spurred people in Asia, in particular, to seek out fennec foxes as pets.”

 ?? ILLUMINATI­ON ENTERTAINM­ENT / UNIVERSAL PICTURES ??
ILLUMINATI­ON ENTERTAINM­ENT / UNIVERSAL PICTURES
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 ?? PIXAR/ DISNEY STUDIOS ?? Marlin ( a clownfish) and Dory, right, ( a blue tang) help to inspire aquarium hobbyists.
PIXAR/ DISNEY STUDIOS Marlin ( a clownfish) and Dory, right, ( a blue tang) help to inspire aquarium hobbyists.
 ?? RUI ELLIE MIAO, USA TODAY ?? Duke, a Newfoundla­nd dog character in The Secret Life
of Pets, decorates the window of the dog day care area of a New York City PetSmart store.
RUI ELLIE MIAO, USA TODAY Duke, a Newfoundla­nd dog character in The Secret Life of Pets, decorates the window of the dog day care area of a New York City PetSmart store.
 ?? RUI ELLIE MIAO, USA TODAY ?? Dog supplies and movie icons have a symbiotic relationsh­ip.
RUI ELLIE MIAO, USA TODAY Dog supplies and movie icons have a symbiotic relationsh­ip.

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